<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div xml:lang="eng" type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo015.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="34" subtype="chapter"><p>His cruel and sanguinary disposition was exhibited upon great as well as trifling
					occasions. When any person was to be put to the torture, or criminal punished
					for parricide, he was impatient for the execution, and would have it performed
					in his own presence. When he was at Tibur, being desirous of seeing an example
					of the old way of putting malefactors to death, some were immediately bound to a
					stake for the purpose; but there being no executioner to be had at the place, he
					sent for one from <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, and waited for
					his coming until night. In any exhibition of gladiators, presented either by
					himself or others, if any of the combatants chanced to fall, he ordered them to
					be butchered, especially the Retiaii, that he might see their faces in the
					agonies of death. Two gladiators happening to kill each other, he immediately
					ordered some little knives to be made of their swords for his own use. He took
					great pleasure in seeing men engage with wild beasts, and the combatants who
					appeared on the stage at noon. He woul I therefore come to the theatre by break
					of day, and at noon, dismissing the people to dinner, continued sitting himself;
					and besides those who were devoted to that sanguinary fate, he would match
					others with the beasts, upon slight or sudden occasions; as, for instance, the
					carpenters and their assistants, and people of that sort, if a machine, or any
					piece of work in which they had been employed about the theatre did not answer
					the purpose for which it had been intended. To this desperate kind of encounter
					he forced one of his nomenclators, even encumbered as he was by wearing the
					toga.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="35" subtype="chapter"><p>But the characteristics most predominant in him were fear and distrust. In the
					beginning of his reign, though he much affected a modest and humble appearance,
					as has been already observed, yet he durst not venture himself at an
					entertainment without being attended by a guard of spearmen, and made soldiers
					wait upon him at table instead of servants. He never visited a sick person,
					until the chamber had been first searched, and the bed and bedding thoroughly
					examined. At other times, all persons who came to pay their court to him were
					strictly searched by officers appointed for that purpose; nor was it until after
					a long time, and with much difficulty, that he was prevailed upon to excuse
					women, boys, and girls from such rude handling, or suffer their attendants or
					writing-masters to retain their cases for pens and styles. When <placeName key="tgn,2068320">Camillus</placeName> formed his plot against him, not
					doubting but his timidity might be worked upon without a war, he wrote to him a
					scurrilous, petulant, and threatening letter, desiring him to resign the
					government, and betake himself to a life of privacy. Upon receiving this
					requisition, he had some thoughts of complying with it, and summoned together
					the principal men of, the city, to consult with them on the subject.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>